I have been searching through the forum for answers and have not found much to the following (many of these may seem like stupid negligible items but I still want to get it right):

1) When putting in dates to mean "currently", do you simply write the date until the proposed start of law school or just write "current" and disregard the format? - i.e. for terms for employment (and/or residence), the app states to use MM/YY format. Do you put 03/06-08/11 or 03/06-Current (and just ignore the MM/YY for the ending date)

2) When adding an addendum for the required Y/N questions, do you put explanations all on one addendum/attachment or make a separate attachement/addendum for each? Also, double space or single (also for the PS)? -i.e. if you answered yes for questions 24, 26, and 28, do you put one addendum titled "Questions 24-28 Explanations) and write all the answers down or do a separate title/addendum for each question?

On a side note, does anybody know if getting you're license put on probation then suspended due to too many points in Virginia is considered a misdemeanor? I asked the Virginia DMV and the lady said no but very unconvincingly. Then I asked her if she was 100% sure and she said "yea, I'm fairly certain."

1) i just put current2) attachments, i would put separate, in the end doesn't really matter b/c it's all going onto one PDF. as for spacing, whatever you want as they did not explicitly give directions, though i feel TLS recoil w/: DOUBLE SPACE EVERYTHING BUDDY KTHXBAI

side note: my initial reaction is you already put the effort in and found that it is a "no" but this stuff is serious (not your points, i mean law school and all that) so maybe double check w/ another source? like find out how VA state bar exam defines misdemeanor

1. It's standard to just put "to Date" or "to Present" on your resume and applications to indicate that you are still working (or doing something) somewhere and will continue it until further notice. DON'T just put today's date and DON'T put the date you think you will stop working there. One possible exception: your job has a SPECIFIED ending date, like you are on a SPECIFICALLY three month contract---even then its more customary to just say "to Present")

So for example, I started a new job in August. On my resume it is listed as: August 2010 to PresentAnd on applications (where you rarely, if ever spell out the month because of space constraints) I listed it as "08/2010 to Present"

Sometimes I use "to Date" instead of "to Present". It means the same thing. Most people don't really care as long as it makes sense and you are consistent.

2. Separate the addendums if they are two different issues. For example, bad grades and a criminal offense. Keep them together if they are multiple counts of the same issue. For example, if you have two misdemeanor, put them on the same page. If you are explaining bad grade and bad LSATs, most people say put that on the same page.

When you think about it, it makes sense. These admissions officers see thousands of apps, and, even though it's their job to figure your application out, they will get frustrate if they can't tell EXACTLY what a particular piece of paper is just by looking at it. Clumpling unrelated things together is just confusing and difficult to digest.

I have two addendums (what is the plural of that word anyway?), one for a misdemeanor and one for a bad, downward grade trend. Each addendum is it's own file. I titled the page for each one and underlined the title.